The Buffalo Central Terminal is a closed railroad station for the New York Central Railroad in Buffalo, New York.
Abandoned schools in West Virginia serve as poignant testaments to the state’s changing educational landscape and social fabric. These forsaken edifices, found in both secluded rural areas and bustling urban centers, were once filled with the vibrancy of education and communal engagement.
In the rugged terrain of West Virginia, abandoned houses stand as silent witnesses to a bygone era.
Williamson Memorial Hospital, once an operational medical facility, has now been repurposed into an event destination in Williamson, West Virginia.
The West Virginia Coal & Coke Company Power Plant was a 7,000 KW coal-fired electrical generation facility in Logan County, West Virginia.
This is a gallery of abandoned and forgotten communities in West Virginia.
The Gary Heat, Light & Water Building was home to the utility company along Madison Avenue in Gary, Indiana.
H. Gordon and Sons Department Store is an abandoned four-story department store in downtown Gary, Indiana.
Laurelton State School and Hospital is a former institution for developmentally disabled individuals in Pennsylvania.
The Holiday Inn – North Randall was an abandoned hotel adjacent to Randall Park Mall in Randall Park, Ohio.
The Jackson Sanatorium is a former resort and sanatorium in Dansville, New York that focused on recuperation through hydrotherapy and a diet focused on fruits, vegetables, and grains.
The Morris Memorial Hospital for Crippled Children is a historic medical center in Milton, West Virginia. The facility was built in phases from 1936 to 1941 by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) for children stricken with polio. It is being renovated into a resort.
The Hudson-Stuyvesant Motor Company was a producer of Stiverson automobiles and dealer of Hudsons along “Automobile Row” in Cleveland, Ohio.
C.M. Schwab Manual Training School is an abandoned industrial school near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is named after Charles M. Schwab, who rose through the ranks to become the president of the Carnegie Steel Company and then the president of the United States Steel Corporation.
The Tip Top Cereal Company was a cereal manufacturer along Canal Road in Cleveland, Ohio.
The Louisville & Southern Railway Lexington to Lawrenceburg Division is an active and abandoned railroad in central Kentucky. At its centerpiece is Young’s High Bridge.
The Richman Brothers Company is a former manufacturer and distributor of men’s suits, furnishings and hats in Cleveland, Ohio. It operated a tailoring plant, a national network of stores and an office complex.
MetroHealth Clement Center was a MetroHealth medical clinic in Cleveland, Ohio. It was named after Dr. Kenneth W. Clement, a physician, teacher, and civil rights advocate.